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Solana Bootcamp emphasizes Builder first— but what proof do we have?
The bootcamp gives the “Builder” image a boost, but it’s not clear whether builders can truly stay
Solana Developer Bootcamp 2026 was released at a time when the battle for talent was heating up, with a very clear goal: to reinvent a “developer-friendly” narrative. On April 8, SOL surged 7.1% in the short term to $85.72, with trading volume of $4.67 billion and DAU of 2.22 million. Fifteen top accounts simultaneously reposted it. This isn’t just a show of support—it looks like a coordinated counterattack against the claim that there has been “no action after FTX.” Jacob Creech said this is “the best resource for the next generation of developers,” and Mike MacCana affirmed the DevRel team’s investment. That’s how “Builder-first” market awareness was pushed forward. Given how Ethereum’s L2 fragmentation has been pulling developers’ attention apart, Solana is now focusing on self-paced, project-driven courses (from hello-world to prediction markets) to bring people in.
But behind the hype there’s a gap. Developer feedback beneath the tweets is mostly positive—many say they “want to let that inner little developer out to start causing trouble,” but there isn’t enough systematic analysis, and the situation is too new with insufficient data accumulation. The core issue is whether this enthusiasm can turn into sustained developer activity. On-chain metrics—2.22 million DAU and $25.3 billion TVL—look quite healthy, but meme-coin trading inflates these numbers and can’t directly prove that “developers are growing.” Based on what can be seen, the Bootcamp’s GitHub repository (updated on April 1) and a video-first teaching approach, together with lessons from past projects, may drive developers’ wallets to grow year over year by 20–30%. However, without direct data on “active developers,” this is only an indirect signal.
Don’t focus on short-term price fluctuations—the 7.1% intraday surge looks more like structural noise under low liquidity, with no clear causal link to the bootcamp’s fundamentals. The real value comes from developer retention, not a single day’s market move.
Tension between on-chain data and optimistic storytelling
From the course design (hands-on projects like escrow and stableswap), Solana is aiming at AI and RWA directions to attract builders. But external signals are inconsistent: media coverage frames the bootcamp as “positive ecosystem progress” (for example, related integrations with Mastercard), while “security events” (North Korea-related hacks, Stabble warnings, and so on) also dampen risk appetite. My view is that the market is underestimating the possibility of developers returning to Solana. TVL growth has a relative advantage versus ETH. If DAU can hold steady above 2 million, the next 6 to 12 months could be in an early-stage upward leg; if it falls back, the narrative will be harder to sustain.
Overall: the bootcamp has the ability to reverse the flow of talent, but without direct data on “active developers,” it’s not advisable to chase the early hype-driven rise. This is “misaligned optimism.” A more reasonable strategy is selective allocation around ecosystem funding, developer tools, and real application rollouts—targeting builders and institutional capital.
Key takeaways:
Conclusion: This is an early narrative that’s more friendly to “builders, long-term holders, and institutional capital.” Traders don’t have an edge; strategically, you should avoid chasing highs and instead lean toward disciplined dip-buying under conditions where “DAU stays elevated and developer metrics improve.”